Tuesday, July 28, 2009

spider woman

This lovely lady has been living outside in my Boston fern all
summer. She doesn't seem to mind at all when I water it, she just
scampers down into the leaves. Every night she diligently weaves
a web between the fern and the patio light. And every morning I
break it by opening the patio door.


"Will you walk into my parlor?" said the Spider to the Fly,
"'Tis the prettiest little parlor that ever you did spy;
The way into my parlor is up a winding stair,
And I have many curious things to show you when you are there."
"Oh no, no," said the Fly, "to ask me is in vain;
For who goes up your winding stair can ne'er come down again."

from The Spider and the Fly, by Mary Howitt

50 comments:

  1. What beautiful photos... and such a very special guest! Willow, you are starting to become Dr. Dolittle with your Manor Menagerie - the word is out in the Animal Kingdom :-D

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  2. beautiful post willow! my kids are both looking out for the big spiders who come at the end of summer and make their webs at our front door. not yet i keep telling them!!! lots of summer still still to go. steven

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  3. Willow--This spider reminds me of the ones that I see out in my tomatoes. Does it have yellow on it? Do you think that they are the same kind? (I'm assuming you know what I am talking about and maybe I haven't described it well enough). Is that wonderful house with all the ivy yours? That ivy is incredible. Are there lots of bugs associated with ivy growing on a house?

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  4. Great shots, Willow! Spiders always amaze me--such intricate, delicate yet powerful webs they weave, n'est ce pas??!

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  5. you take the best photos! look at this one for instance. i would swear that the spider is at least 5" across. yikes!!!!

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  6. elegant in pics and in word. beware teh staircase little fly!

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  7. Great shots. Seems this time of year they are everywhere.

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  8. i like the big creepy spiders in their webs...outside, please!

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  9. When I read your title I immediately thought of the "spider woman" Navajo creation story. Check this out:

    http://www.indianlegend.com/navajo/navajo_002.htm

    Here's hoping the link works - haven't done that in a comment before!

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  10. Lovely little lady.

    I had a tiny tiny cute spider in my bathroom the other night. Usually I just put them in a jar and put them outside in the morning, but this was so small I decided to let it stay. But then it kept running towards the sink as I tried to wash. I tried reasoning with it, but it had a mind of its own. So I gave it fair warning by sprinkling some water towards it and it ran behind the soap dish. Everything was fine until the next morning when I found it in the sink next to the drain. I told it it was just being stupid and now it had to leave. It took considerable time but I coaxed it into a small jar and set it free outside on the grapevine. I'll hope it wasn't immediately eaten by a lizard.

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  11. I think E.B. White and CHARLOTTE'S WEB changed a lot of folks' perceptions re spiders.

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  12. She is really pretty. I share my deck most of the year with the spiders, but reserve it for myself in summer. It seems to be working okay. They always return.

    Great pictures - now I'm off to make your plumb and cherry crumble.

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  13. too bad i'm terrified of the little darlings! :0

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  14. eeew,
    i have a spider lady, or maybe LADIES knitting away all night.
    i usually get the web caught on my arm on my way to my garbage can every night.
    it creeps me out.
    xx

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  15. Just keep it away from my chin!!! LOL!

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  16. Lovely lady, here! And so determined. Haven't read that poem in a while but now have a music version going through my mind... just in time for work! Ach!

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  17. This is a poem I always quoted to my kids when I was pulling their legs.

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  18. I wish I could appreciate spiders more but they grow rather large in this part of the world and I am frankly terrified of the big ones. We also have redbacks and they can kill small children and so I'm often tense in our garden. Our next door neighbour had 30 large redbacks! Your spider lady is lovely but at a distance! xx

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  19. Fantastic photos Willow, my grand daughter loves me tickling her whilst playing Incy Wincy Spider...lol. Amazing creatures.

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  20. wow,you really capture it very well on the pictures.Nice.

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  21. Hello Willow,

    I'm happy to look at your pictures; it looks very colourful. But I'd prefer not to have them around. Outside is OK!

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  22. I have a spider who does the same thing and once I forgot and opened the door too quickly and she landed on my shoulder. I don't have spider phobia but I did let out a shriek and brushed her off.

    Lovely photos

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  23. I know I'm supposed to like spiders. My mother used to say, "Spiders are our friends."

    But they really really really really creep me out!! YIKES!!

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  24. Amy, thanks for the link. Interesing Navajo story about Spider rock. I'd not heard of it.

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  25. Hey, all, I'm okay with spiders outside, but this spider woman wouldn't be welcome inside, especially in my bedroom. Otin, keep her away from your chin, LOL!

    Vicki, I totally agree with you about Charlotte's Web putting a pleasant light on spiders.

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  26. Nancy, hope the crumble turns out for you! I usually make it several times in the summer. mmm.

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  27. Lovely spider lady and the poem is so witty, thank you!

    I simply love spiders.

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  28. GROSSSSS...I know spideys are beneficial to our garden world...but if one would touch me ever so slightly...EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!

    That's all she wrote!!!

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  29. Yes, pretty...but from a distance! We've had a summer of spider bites here...crazy!

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  30. Lovely photos. Such a hard working lady spider.

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  31. I love spiders. I usually have a big brown hose spider nesting in the corner of one of my windows. When we first looked at the country house, there were huge webs with big golden orb weavers all around as the house had been empty for many months. I thought it a good omen. And lastly, there is a wonderful Navaho cautionary tale about Spiderwoman which spoke directly to me. I guess the spider is my totem.

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  32. Ellen, Amy left me the link to that Navajo story in the comments above. It was completely new to me, and I found it very charming!

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  33. Very cool shot .. I hope it was with a ZOOM .. a BIG ZOOM .. cause I am seriously a-feared of them spiders ...

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  34. Great photos. You have even captured the web which takes some doing.

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  35. In my novel, My main Character collects wolf spiders in mason jars. I love THEM!

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  36. Sometimes I'm not as smart as a fly!
    Your little lady has her work cut out for her every day..
    wonderful pics!

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  37. That is the first time Ihave heard the end of the spider/fly poem! What do you think she lives on if you keep breaking her web - maybe she comes out and has a mooch about when you are all in bed.

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  38. What a visitor! She looks big!

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  39. Suzanne, those huge, fuzzy wolf spiders remind me of tarantulas! They DO scare me!!

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  40. While spiders do creep me out, she is a lovely little specimen. Any idea what kind she is?

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  41. I like spiders. Had one a couple of summers ago who would spin her web a little higher so I could get in my shop without destroying her web in my path. One day I just stopped and told her. She was sitting in the corner of the door. "Please make your web higher up so I can get in. That way I won't run into it every morning."

    You don't have to believe this, but so help me Jehoshaphat, the next morning the web was higher and I was able to walk under it. I stopped and said, "Thanks, Claude." And I suppose she understood that too.

    Thanks for your visit to my smelly blog. If you come back tonight and tomorrow you can see my first fried squirrel. Tell your friends I need 10,000 visitors soon. I want to go out with a record.

    I wanted to tell someone who understands more about photography than just pushing the shutter button that your visit will count and help make history. Pick a Peck of Pixels

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  42. Is that the actual size? I'm a bit agoraphobic, but still I will rescue them and put them outside.

    Kat

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  43. What a great garden spider. Very striking pictures.

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  44. Kat, it's a big spider, but not quite as big as it looks. In reality, it's about half the size in the picture, which is still big, in my book!

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  45. i could probably never get over my phobia of spiders
    Luckily, I don't live in Australia, where they're the size of a football, apparently. Imagine having THAT on your front door?!

    I wish my zoom didn't go all focus-retarded whenever I try to get a good close-up shot of one. I can't stand getting too close - they might crawl up my nostrils!!


    http://lookatmybackpages.blogspot.com/

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  46. Would you believe it? My son is going to summer camp tomorrow on his own and we just came back from helping load up the lorry with all the stuff they're taking and we saw this little spider outside our house in the front garden eating its supper. It was some kind of black beetle but my God! the little spider was enjoying it. Say hi to your eight-legged friend for me :-).

    Greetings from London.

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  47. I love spiders ... and don't mind at all when I find them in my house and would never, ever think of killing one - or any insect for that matter. Great photos ! xo les Gang

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  48. I have been missing all of your great posts.

    Great posts and fantastic pictures.

    I'll try to catch up on all of the great stuff here.

    I'm back to posting so,
    A Three-Banded Grasshopper is up for viewing.
    To see the post, Click here.
    Troy and Martha

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Inject a few raisins of conversation into the tasteless dough of existence.
― O. Henry (and me)